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2 Free reproduction rights with citation to the original. EarthRights International (ERI) combines the power of law and the power of people in defense of human rights and the environment. We focus our work at the intersection of human rights and the environment, which we define as earth rights. We specialize in fact-finding, legal actions against perpetrators of earth rights abuses, training for grassroots and community leaders and advocacy campaigns. Through these strategies, ERI seeks to end earth rights abuses, and to promote and protect earth rights. ERI would like to thank the Conservation, Food and Health Foundation, the Open Society Institute, the Sigrid Rausing Trust, the International Centre for Human Rights and the Threshold Foundation for their generous financial support of our work, without which this report would not have been possible. Southeast Asia Office U.S. Office P.O. Box K St., N.W. Chiang Mai University Washington D.C. Chiang Mai Tel: Tel: Fax: infoasia@earthrights.org infousa@earthrights.org For more information on ERI, visit Editorial and Research Team Mahn Nay Myo Alisa Loveman Naing Htoo Elie Halpern Matthew Smith Chana Maung Carol Ransley Written By Cliff McCoy Layout and Design Aung Moe Win

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4 Preface This report addresses the environmental and human rights situation faced by villagers and migrant workers in Shwegyin township of Nyaunglebin District, Pegu Division, Burma. Specifically, it examines the area around the Shwegyin and Mawtama Rivers where the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC) and its business partners are engaged in building a dam, mining for gold, and logging the forests. The Burmese Army has heavily militarized the area in order to guarantee security over the land, people, and these lucrative projects. As a result of this militarization, the military has demanded money, labor, and materials from local villagers. The Army has also confiscated civilian land to use for Army camps and commercial farming. These practices violate customary and conventional international law. Much of the research for this report was conducted between 2003 and In 2006, during the writing of this report, the SPDC launched a major new offensive throughout northern Karen State and eastern Pegu Division which has completely destroyed the ceasefire agreement between the SPDC and the Karen National Union (KNU), which was originally initiated by a gentlemen s agreement in January Shwegyin township was targeted in the offensive and at least fifteen battalions have been operating within the township. Columns of soldiers have hunted down villagers in the mountains to the east of the Shwegyin River, shooting them on sight and destroying their food supplies. This continues to date. At present, as a result of the SPDC s offensive, there are almost 6,000 internally displaced villagers in Shwegyin township. This report looks at human rights and environmental abuses in an area controlled by the SPDC, but within which the KNU is still able to operate. The current offensive is directed at areas just to the east, which the SPDC does not control. It can be expected that, once the Burmese Army has pushed the KNU out of the area and established control over it, the human rights abuses and environmental exploitation occurring in the western portion of Shwegyin township will likewise occur in the newly occupied areas. Mining companies have already been lobbying the Army to increase security on the east side of the Shwegyin River so that they can expand their mining operations. Logging companies will likewise be very interested in logging the forests in the hills, which have for a long time been protected by the KNU and are thus relatively untapped. If the SPDC s offensive is not halted, the abuses that have already been committed along the Shwegyin and Mawtama Rivers will be expanded to these newly gained areas as well as to the other areas of Karen State and Pegu Division, where SPDC Army columns are trying to take control. This report aims to focus attention on the SPDC s use of the military to seize territory for business interests, provide security for business projects, and to exploit the people and environment in areas under its control.

5 Although this report focuses on a specific and relatively small geographic area, these abuses pervade Burma, especially in areas where there is active resistance to the regime. Increased international pressure must be placed on the SPDC to discontinue these practices and to involve the local population in decisions that affect their lives and the environment.

6 We all suffer, but in different ways around the Shwegyin River. Some people suffer from mining, some from damming, some from taxes and some from other oppression. It is very hard to live in this diffi cult situation. What we once considered our treasure has now become our sorrow. All the places and fi elds along the Shwegyin River used to be owned by the Karen people. Many of these places are old village sites. When the next generation is asked where their parents lived, they won t be able to say anything because the land will have been destroyed and there won t be anything left to show them. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 1

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8 Contents Abbreviations...9 Maps...11 Map of Burma...11 Map of Nyaunglebin District...12 Map of Shwegyin Township...13 I. Executive Summary...15 II. Recommendations...17 III. Description of the Area...21 IV. Militarization of the Area...25 The Burmese Army Presence...25 Travel Restrictions...26 Forced Labor...29 Fees...32 Land Confiscation...33 V. Gold Mining...35 The Mining Concessions...35 Collusion between the SPDC and the Mining Companies...37 Methods of Gold Mining...38 Impacts of the Gold Mining...40 Land Confiscation and Loss of Livelihood...40 Environmental Impacts...43 Influx of Migrant Workers and Ethnic Tension...44 VI. Logging...47 VII. The Kyauk Naga Dam...51 The Dam Project Corruption at the Dam Site...52 Impacts of the Dam Project...53 Land Confiscation...53 Environmental Impacts...54 Stone Collection...55 Other Impacts...55 VIII. The 2006 Military Offensive in Shwegyin Township...57 IX. Conclusion...59 Appendices...61 Appendix A: Summary of Rights Violated in the Research Area...61 Appendix B: Fees Paid to the Burmese Army and SPDC...64 Appendix C: Burmese Army Commanders in Shwegyin Township...66 Appendix D: Summary of Hydroelectric Projects in the Research Area Endnotes...69

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10 Abbreviations 9 Acronyms SPDC SLORC BSPP KNU KNLA DKBA State Peace & Development Council, military junta currently ruling Burma State Law & Order Restoration Council, former name of the SPDC until November 1997 Burma Socialist Program Party, military regime prior to the democracy demonstrations in 1988, replaced by SLORC Karen National Union, main Karen opposition group Karen National Liberation Army, military wing of the KNU Democratic Karen Buddhist Army, Karen group allied with the SPDC Military Terms LID Light Infantry Division; ten battalions SOC Strategic Operations Command; area headquarters with 3-4 battalions under it IB Infantry Battalion; usually about soldiers LIB Light Infantry Battalion; usually about soldiers Company Military unit of about 100 soldiers, though often understrength Column Combination of companies assembled for operations, usually soldiers Camp Army base or outpost; from remote hill posts of ten soldiers to battalion headquarters camps of several hundred soldiers Administrative Terms Division Civil administrative unit for the seven predominately Burman areas of Burma; made up of several districts State Civil administrative unit for the seven predominately non-burman areas of Burma; made up of several districts District Civil administrative unit made up of several townships Township Civil administrative unit made up of several village tracts and a central town Village Tract Civil administrative unit made up of several villages grouped around one larger village PDC SPDC organized administrative units that exist at the State/Division, District, township and villager tract level. Common Measurements Kyat Burmese currency; approximately 5.7 Kyat = $1 at current official rates. At the unofficial exchange rate Kyat was at nearly 1,400 Kyat / $1 US at the end of All prices, unless otherwise noted, are unofficial. kyat Unit of weight used for gold; 1 kyat = 16.3 grams (about 16 peh tha)

11 10 peh tha Unit of weight used for gold; 1 peh tha = grams (about 6 kyat kyat tha yway lay Other Terms loh ah pay Kaw Thoo Lei IDP tha) Unit of weight used for gold; 1 kyat tha =.163 grams (1.2 yway lay) Unit of weight used for gold; 1 yway lay =.136 grams Voluntary labor to make merit, but commonly used by SPDC for most forms of forced labor. Karen name for their homeland; also used to refer to the KNU/ KNLA Internally Displaced Person; villagers who have become internal refugees.

12 Map of Burma 11

13 12 Map of Nyaunglebin District

14 13 Map of Shwe Gyin area

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16 I. Executive Summary 15 This report describes how human rights and environmental abuses continue to be a serious problem in eastern Pegu division, Burma specifically, in Shwegyin township of Nyaunglebin District. 2 The heavy militarization of the region, the indiscriminate granting of mining and logging concessions, and the construction of the Kyauk Naga Dam have led to forced labor, land confiscation, extortion, forced relocation, and the destruction of the natural environment. The human consequences of these practices, many of which violate customary and conventional international law, have been social unrest, increased financial hardship, and great personal suffering for the victims of human rights abuses. By contrast, the SPDC and its business partners have benefited greatly from this exploitation. The businessmen, through their contacts, have been able to rapidly expand their operations to exploit the township s gold and timber resources. The SPDC, for its part, is getting rich off the fees and labor exacted from the villagers. Its dam project will forever change the geography of the area, at great personal cost to the villagers, but it will give the regime more electricity and water to irrigate its agro-business projects. Karen villagers in the area previously panned for gold and sold it to supplement their incomes from their fields and plantations. They have also long been involved in small-scale logging of the forests. In 1997, the SPDC and businessmen began to industrialize the exploitation of gold deposits and forests in the area. Businessmen from central Burma eventually arrived and in collusion with the Burmese Army gained mining concessions and began to force people off of their land. Villagers in the area continue to lose their land, and with it their ability to provide for themselves. The Army abuses local villagers, confiscates their land, and continues to extort their money. Commodity prices continue to rise, compounding the difficulties of daily survival. Large numbers of migrant workers have moved into the area to work the mining concessions and log the forests. This has created a complicated tension between the Karen and these migrants. While the migrant workers are merely trying to earn enough money to feed their families, they are doing so on the Karen s ancestral land and through the exploitation of local resources. Most of the migrant workers are Burman, which increases ethnic tensions in an area where Burmans often represent the SPDC and the Army and are already seen as sneaky and oppressive by the local Karen.

17 16 These forms of exploitation increased since the announcement of the construction of the Kyauk Naga Dam in 2000, which is expected to be completed in late The SPDC has enabled the mining and logging companies to extract as much as they can before the area upstream of the dam is flooded. This situation has intensified and increased human rights violations against villagers in the area. The militarization of the region, as elsewhere, has resulted in forced labor, extortion of money, goods, and building materials, and forced relocation by the Army. In addition to these direct human rights violations, the mining and dam construction have also resulted in grave environmental degradation of the area. The mining process has resulted in toxic runoff that has damaged or destroyed fields and plantations downstream. The dam, once completed, will submerge fields, plantations, villages, and forests. In addition, the dam will be used to irrigate rubber plantations jointly owned by the SPDC and private business interests. The Burmese Army has also made moves to secure the area in the mountains to the east of the Shwegyin River. This has led to relocations and the forced displacement of thousands of Karen villagers living in the mountains. Once the Army has secured the area, the mining and logging companies will surely follow. This report is based on field surveys and in-depth interviews conducted by EarthRights International (ERI) in the district since Most of the information presented here was gathered between 2004 and 2005 from Burmese of different ethnic backgrounds. Many of the individuals interviewed worked for the different extractive industries that operate in the district either as miners, day laborers, loggers, or in other secondary occupations related to the exploitation of non-timber forest products, such as rattan and bamboo. Additional interviews were conducted with internally displaced persons (IDPs) hiding in remote areas of the district as well as former convict porters and soldiers who had defected from the Burmese Army. 3

18 II. Recommendations 17 In the absence of significant political and institutional reforms in Burma, an end to the problems described in this report is unlikely. However, the following recommendations outline the main areas which need to be addressed and specify what domestic and international mechanisms can be used to induce constructive changes. EarthRights International (ERI) calls on the following actors: To the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC): General Human Rights Abuses To make changes to the 1974 Constitution so that civilians have more rights over the land they occupy, including rights to obtain legal land title. The changes should also include provisions to enable civilians to be included in decisions about how their land is used. To create clear mechanisms that state the conditions wherein land may be confiscated by the State. The mechanisms should also contain avenues of complaint for civilians against land seizure and provide clear punishments for State officials who violate these mechanisms. To provide sufficient food, salaries, and other material supplies to its soldiers and officers so that they are self-sufficient in the field and do not need to live off the population. Complaint and punishment mechanisms should be put into place to deter soldiers from the extortion or looting of villagers. To institute safe complaint mechanisms for civilians to report human rights abuses by the military. Military personnel found guilty of these abuses should be punished. To fulfill its obligations under International Labor Organization Convention No. 29 (1930), which it ratified in Additionally, the SPDC should ratify International Labor Organization Convention No. 105 (1957) and implement the terms of this agreement immediately. The SPDC should actively enforce Order No. 1/99 (14 May 1999) and the Order Supplementing Order No. 1/99 (27 October 2000), which outlawed the use of forced labor in all circumstances and proscribed punishment for its use. Protection should be extended to civilians who report forced labor abuses. To sign and ratify the following international human rights documents, including: the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights

19 18 (ICCPR) and its Optional Protocols; the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (ICESCR); the Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment (CAT); the Geneva Convention (the Protection of Civilian Persons in Times of War and its Additional Protocol); and the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. General Environmental Abuses To replace outdated laws and replace ineffective environmental provisions to bring them into accordance with its 1994 Environmental Policy and the UN-supported national action plan for the environment known as Myanmar Agenda 21. To strengthen the National Commission for Environmental Affairs (NCEA) by empowering it to enforce existing laws and other regulations regarding environmental issues. The NCEA should be provided with sufficient human and financial resources to accomplish this task. To reform the system for administering and enforcing environmental laws, which is inefficient and narrowly defined by sector. In most cases, the laws are concerned with licensing requirements (by ministry) and refer to environmental protection in vague terms where they are mentioned at all. To revise and enforce penalties for violating environmental laws. Fines and other deterrents should be adjusted to account for the differences in comparative wealth of individuals, Burmese companies, and foreign companies. This will help prevent situations where it might be more cost-effective to damage the environment instead of preventing the harm in the first place. To offer financial and other incentives to state-owned enterprises and private sector actors to manage the country s natural resources in a sustainable way. Any new dam projects should follow the recommendations of the World Commission on Dams. Mining To ban and take immediate legal action against individuals and companies using ecologically damaging techniques, such as: 1) hydraulic mining, a practice that has been outlawed throughout the world; 2) deep trenching, which involves cutting deep trenches across the farmland; as well as 3) the indiscriminate use of mercury, cyanide, sulphuric acid, and other chemicals to leach precious metals and minerals from extracted ore. To enforce Section 12(a) of SLORC Law No. 8/94 which contains language requiring that: a) all applications to the Ministry of Mines conduct an environmental impact assessment (EIA) prior to receiving official approval to extract minerals, gems, and precious metals; and b) to investigate whether the environment, flora and fauna, highways, religious property, and/or items of cultural heritage would be negatively affected by mining activities. Laws and regulations in both these areas should be strengthened. To create an independent agency to conduct future social impact assessments and environmental impact assessments in order to avoid conflicts of interest. To repeal the section of the SLORC Law No. 8/94,which states that no mining company is liable to prosecution or fines.

20 To promulgate laws that permit citizens whose health and/or livelihoods are harmed by mining activities, including downstream pollution, to file lawsuits and receive adequate compensation for their injuries. 19 To Governments: Governments should encourage the SPDC to unilaterally declare a cease-fire against all groups and begin demilitarizing areas inhabited by non-burman ethnic nationalities. Governments should exert pressure on the SPDC to step down and install a democratic government that also includes ethnic nationality representation. Governments should continue to pressure the SPDC to engage in meaningful and substantive discussions with the National League for Democracy and representatives of the country s many non-burman ethnic nationalities. Governments should maintain existing economic sanctions and continue to withhold international aid to the regime until significant improvements in the human rights situation are independently verified by the UN Special Rapporteur on the human rights situation in Myanmar and other monitoring groups. Governments should demand that Daw Aung San Suu Kyi be released from protective custody so that she may resume her normal activities as head of the political opposition. International Organizations and NGOs: The International Labor Organization (ILO) should strengthen existing resolutions on Burma to require the ILO s constituents (governments, employees, and labor) to take concrete actions to eliminate trade with and assistance to the regime that is contributing to the practice of forced labor. UN agencies and other international environmental organizations should abstain from providing funding or other technical forms of assistance until serious steps are taken by the SPDC towards meeting its existing international treaty obligations regarding the environment. The Asia-Pacific Center for Environmental Law and the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) should pressure the SPDC to honor the terms of Myanmar Agenda 21, which they helped author. NGOs should continue to develop the capacity of indigenous groups to document human rights and environmental abuses and advocate for change in relevant regional and international forums. To Private Sector Actors: Private sector actors should refrain from investing in or providing technical support for extractive industries in Burma until the companies adopt internationally recognized best-practices to protect laborers and to safeguard the environment. Major importers and distributors of gold should eliminate their tacit support of the SDPC by refusing to import these products from Burma, refrain from purchasing Burmese gold through third countries, or through smuggled or illegal shipments.

21 20 To Opposition Groups: Provide for measures in any future constitution which will protect the environment and create mechanisms for the enforcement of those measures. Put in place a moratorium on all new large-scale development projects, i.e. dams, mining, logging operations, until a new constitution and political structure is in place. Develop a comprehensive resource development strategy based on the principle of ecological sustainability. Develop a strategy to deal with land confiscation. Any new dam projects should follow the recommendations of the World Commission on Dams.

22 III. Description of the Area Geographical Location Shwegyin township lies to the east of the Sittaung River and is centered on the town of Shwegyin. Plains crisscrossed by streams extend from the Sittaung River east until the Shwegyin River where the terrain becomes more hilly, building into forested mountains that extend away into Papun District to the east. Shwegyin town is the township center for the local SPDC Township Peace and Development Council. It has become something of a business center in the past five years, and is becoming more developed. People in the area, however, say that it still lacks good educational and health facilities. 4 People travel to and from Shwegyin by bullock cart and small boats. Small boats are able to travel the Shwegyin River as far north as Ler Wah village. 21 Shwegyin town was a very poor town before, but in the past fi ve years the town has grown and developed. The town has become a business center. Burman migrant mine worker in Shwegyin township 5 Agricultural Features Most of the fertile farmland is in the plains along the Sittaung River and along the banks of the Shwegyin and Mawtama Rivers. Villagers in the plains traditionally grow rice and maintain plantations of shaut, mangosteen, durian, betelnut, and rubber. After years of relocations due to anti-insurgency campaigns, many villagers have given up on their rice fields and have concentrated on their fruit plantations. The fruit is sold in town and the money used to buy rice and other foodstuffs. Most of the villagers income comes from the sale of shaut. This year-round fruit is like a lime, although larger. There are over 1,000 acres of shaut plantations in the township with nearly 250 plantations located along the Shwegyin and Mawtama Rivers (Appendix B). 6 Shaut is extremely popular in Burma. In 2005, shaut sold for 15 Kyat per fruit in Shwegyin, but could earn as much as 50 Kyat per fruit in Rangoon. The trees take up to ten years before they can produce fruit, although grafting can reduce this to as little as three to four years. A shaut tree can be productive for 20 to 30 years. 7

23 22 Military Significance Shwegyin township, and Nyaunglebin District as a whole, has been the scene of fighting between the Karen National Union (KNU) and successive Burmese regimes since the Karen armed struggle began in Since then, the KNU has been slowly forced to retreat up into the eastern hills of Burma and the Burmese Army gained at least nominal control over the plains of the district in the early 1970 s. Many villagers in the area talk about the Four Cuts, the Burmese Army s counterinsurgency strategy to destroy resistance groups by cutting them off from food, funds, intelligence, and recruits. For many villagers in Nyaunglebin District, this refers to a specific time beginning in 1975 when the strategy was first introduced to the area and fighting and displacement in the district were especially severe. After the rainy season in 1975, the Burmese soldiers announced to all the villages in the valley area that they had to move deeper [inside Burma to the west] in the Shwegyin area. Some villagers went up into the hills after this and some went deeper inside and they didn t see each other again. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 9 From the mid-1970 s through the 1990 s the Burmese Army gradually strengthened its control over the plains while periodically conducting offensives against KNU strongholds in the mountains to the east. During this time, the number of battalions stationed in the area increased with a corresponding increase in the number of camps. In an attempt to cut the plains off from the KNU in the mountains, the Army conducted several mass forced relocations of villages on the plains to sites closer to Army camps. The relocation sites made it easier for the Army to control the movement of the population as well as easier to demand forced labor, money, food, and materials. In , there was heavy fi ghting between the Burmese soldiers and the Karen soldiers in this area. There were many military offenses and I had to appear neutral and could not look like I was taking sides. Sometimes we had to go help the Burmese soldiers when they asked and sometimes we had to go help the Karen soldiers if they asked. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 10 Despite the Army s efforts, the KNU is currently still able to go down into the plains for short periods of time to gather information, funds, recruits, and food. Their ability to do this was underlined when they overran the battalion headquarters camp of LIB 589 at Duyineseik village in Shwegyin township on March 2004, taking a large amount of weapons and radios before blowing up the camp. 11 Forced Relocation A central component of the Burmese Army s strategy is the relocation of villagers to central villages or towns near Army camps. In Shwegyin township, this happened in the 1970 s and 80 s. Villagers were usually given very little warning, sometimes none at all. On the appointed day for the relocation the villagers were expected to move with everything they could carry. The villages were looted and then destroyed by the soldiers afterward. Nothing was provided in the relocation

24 sites so the villagers had to find their own food and materials for building new houses. The land around the sites was already owned so there was no land around the relocation site for the villagers to work. Forced relocation violates the United Nations Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement, which provide, inter alia, protection against arbitrary displacement, and a particular obligation, on the part of the displacing forces, to protect against the displacement of indigenous peoples, minorities, peasants, pastoralists, and other groups with a special dependency on and attachment to the land. 12 While the Guiding Principles are aspirational norms rather than binding law, they are highly regarded as best practices by international agencies, international financial institutions, and non-governmental organizations. Although the relocated villagers are sometimes allowed to return to their fields and plantations, they are relocated quite far from their land, making it difficult to return on a daily basis to work the land. The Army places arbitrary travel restrictions on the villagers, limiting where and when they can travel, and sometimes restricting travel to the fields altogether. As a result, villagers are often forced to find work as day laborers in the towns or villages near their relocation site, or in the fields around them. Most villagers are unaccustomed to living like this and find it very difficult to make a living. The villages that were relocated along the Shwegyin River in the 1970 s remain unpopulated to this day. Most of the villagers from that area are living near Shwegyin town in relocation sites that over time have become villages. These villagers are permitted to return to their fields and plantations only if they have Army issued passes, although not to the eastern side of the Shwegyin River. 13 These limits on resettlement clearly violate Guiding Principles guidelines concerning safe return, resettlement, and reintegration. 23 One day we had a fi eld and a house and the next day we had to leave and the fi eld was ruined. We don t have a normal situation around the Shwegyin River because a lot of people still face these kinds of problems. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 14 Presently in Shwegyin township there are no Karen villages along the Shwegyin River or Mawtama River. The villages on the western bank of the Shwegyin river were relocated to Shwegyin or along the road linking Shwegyin with Kyauk Kyi in the 1970 s and 80 s. 15 These villagers are allowed to return to their land, stay in their field huts for limited periods of time, and work their fields and plantations, but they are not allowed to reestablish and resettle their villages. Villagers on the eastern bank of the Shwegyin and along the Mawtama Rivers fled their original villages many years ago and now live in hiding in the mountains nearby. They have set up temporary hiding sites and live in daily fear of the Burmese Army. 16 There were a lot of villages in this area before, but during the Four Cuts Operation most of the villages were destroyed. When I was young, we caught fi sh from the Shwegyin River to make fi shpaste. We would go up into the hills and hunt wild animals in the forest. We also tended a rice fi eld. During the Four Cuts we were relocated to the town and we were not allowed to do that kind of work, but my family was still able to send me to school. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 17

25 24 In the aftermath of another offensive in 1997, logging and mining companies moved into these unpopulated zones along the Shwegyin and Mawtama Rivers. 18 Temporary villages sprouted up around the mining sites at Ka Nee, Ywa Myo, Po Loh, Meh Zaung and Su Mu Hta, but they are now mostly occupied by Burman mine workers from across the Sittaung River.

26 IV. Militarization of the Area The Burmese Army Presence The Burmese Army maintains a heavy presence in Shwegyin township, with headquarters for one of the Strategic Operations Commands of the Southern Regional Command located near Shwegyin town. Strategic Operations Commands (SOC) are headquarter units responsible for the coordination of three or more battalions. In the area around Shwegyin town there are battalion base camps for four battalions; IB 57, LIB 349, LIB 350 and LIB 589. All of these battalions are controlled by the SOC in Shwegyin. Occasionally, other battalions are brought into the area to conduct specific operations. One of the responsibilities of these units is to secure the area against the KNLA. To do this, the Army has set up smaller camps throughout the area and conducts patrols in the areas around the camps. Despite that, most of the responsibility of these units is largely economic related, as they are responsible for guaranteeing the security of the Kyauk Naga Dam, the mining operations, and the logging operations. The Army has made it very difficult for villagers to pass through the area where the dam is being built and there are reports that they plan to place landmines around the site. 19 There are Burmese Army camps located at Meh Zone, Ywa Mone, Kyauk Naga, Aw Meh Zaw, Ma Inn Ga, Su Mu Hta, Boh Loh and Bway Po. The battalions rotate their companies and platoons through the security camps in the hills around Shwegyin every two to three months. 25 The reason the soldiers are here is to secure the dam site area and the mining project areas. They rotate their soldiers every two to three months. We have to rebuild our relationships with the soldiers after every rotation. Sometimes it can be very hard and sometimes it can be alright. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township 20 Every two months every battalion leaves and is exchanged for another one. When the new battalion arrives they reorganize the camp and follow a new system. The camp system changes and also the checkpoint system and communications system changes. At that time they go around and order a lot of people to go and work for them. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 21 Shwegyin township also used to be an area of operations for the Dam Byan Byaut Kya, or Guerrilla Retaliation Units. These small units operated in the area from late 1998 until recently.

27 26 They behaved like hit squads, assassinating villagers they suspected of having past or current contact with the KNU or KNLA. Villagers they deemed suspicious were summarily executed, often with knives in a very brutal fashion, sometimes being tortured first or mutilated after death. 22 Although the units appear to have been disbanded, the fear that they instilled in the villagers endures, making them reticent to complain to the soldiers or the Township PDC, or even to the Burman migrant workers. We don t want to argue with the soldiers because working the fi elds is our life and the fi elds belong to our family and we don t have any other way of getting an income. We are sometimes dissatisfi ed with the soldiers but we don t show our anger to them. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 23 Much of the Army s attention has been on the foothills, where villagers in the plains are cut off from the villages and the KNU in the mountains. To achieve this, the Army maintains a heavy and permanent military presence in the area and, as mentioned, occasionally brings in units from other areas for specific operations. The Army relocates villages and villagers suspected of assisting the KNU or assisting internally displaced people (IDP). Villagers located deeper in the mountains have had their houses and fields destroyed and villagers are shot on sight. Travel Restrictions Shwegyin township is considered a frontline area by the SPDC. The mountains where the KNU finds refuge are only just across the Shwegyin River, and the KNU are still very capable of traveling down into the plains, to say nothing of the current risks involved in doing so. In order to maintain control and limit villagers contact with the KNU, the Burmese Army places heavy restrictions on the villages under its control in this area. Travel is tightly controlled, with regulations on even the carrying of food and medicine, and the use of flashlights. Villagers who violate restrictions face serious consequences. As discussed above, villagers are permitted to travel to and from the fields and plantations around their old villages, as long as they stay on the west side of the Shwegyin River and have an Army issued pass. The villagers are permitted to stay in small huts in their plantations, but they are prohibited from rebuilding and resettling in their old villages. 24 Nothing excapes regulation - even the food villagers take with them to the fields is regulated: they are not allowed to take more than a week s worth of food with them to the fields. Villagers must record the amount of food they want to take in a ledger kept by the village section leader. The section leader then grants permission to buy that specified amount of food, or the amount he deems permissible. If the villagers are caught transporting more food than that which they gained permission to transport, then it is confiscated by the soldiers. 25 As mentioned above, villagers who want to travel must obtain travel passes from the local Army camp. The passes are written on paper with the person s details and the purpose of the trip, and carry an official stamp from the Army camp. Passes from the camps allow the villagers to return to their fields and plantations, and usually indicate the amount of time the villager has been granted to stay at

28 their field hut. Villagers caught without passes are often arrested by passing Burmese Army patrols and accused of supporting the KNU. This has resulted in interrogation and summary execution. People without passes are often forced to porter for the Army unit that captured them, which involves carrying heavy loads for unspecified amounts of time without compensation. For these reasons, most people are sure to obtain passes before traveling to their fields. Another type of pass is the town pass, which people can obtain from the Township PDC in Shwegyin. This pass costs 500 Kyat and allows the holder to travel between towns; and much farther than the pass from the battalion. Unlike the other passes, these passes are not used to work in the fields We have a limited number of days to look after the gardens. When the section leaders provide passes, they only give passes for three days. If we stay more than three days, there will be punishment for the people who do not follow orders.... The military sometimes suspects people who go to the plantations. We have heard about many cases of people being beaten and killed when they did not tell the truth about people who have gardens. We don t know why they act like this. Conditions have gotten worse and worse and farmers are working less and less. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 27 Periodically, the Army entirely forbids the villagers from traveling to their old village sites, which occurs when they are conducting operations in the area or have information that the KNU may be nearby. During these periods, no passes are issued and villagers caught in their fields are often shot on sight. As mentioned, the travel restrictions make it difficult for villagers to work in their fields and tend their plantations. The inability to spend enough time in the fields and plantations increases the risk of crop failure and increases the risk that crops will be eaten by animals or rot before harvest, all of which issues a considerable blow to livelihood and even subsistence. The Burmese Army has also setup checkpoints along the roads and rivers in the area. These checkpoints are often manned by a few soldiers in a small bunker or bamboo hut with a swing gate attached. Villagers and mine workers are required to show their pass at each of these checkpoints. Even with the pass, a 50 Kyat fee must be paid at each checkpoint. When the villagers have to pass through a checkpoint they have pay 50 Kyat per person. There are seven checkpoints and everyone must pay 50 Kyat when they pass through them. When villagers take shaut to town they have to pay 500 Kyat at each checkpoint. There are also other fees for logs, dogfruit, cane, and boats. For me it costs about 5,000 Kyat to go and come back from Shwegyin town each time. You have to have the exact change for the checkpoints or they will take all your money and not give you any change. Everyone who passes through a checkpoint has to show a pass and give money. When there is a problem with one person, all of the people passing through have to wait in the sun and can t go. Karen villager in Shwegyin township. 28

29 28 The township chairman said there was peace in the town area, but there really wasn t because outside the town area it wasn t like that. There were too many problems at the Army and TPDC checkpoints. They demanded fees at the checkpoint for passing and more fees for bullock cartloads and other loads. Karen people didn t travel much because they were afraid to pass through the checkpoints. We usually only use a pass as an ID card and the soldiers ask us questions about the passes and information about the Karen rebels. Sometimes the Karen rebels came to the shaut plantations, but we wouldn t tell them [the Burmese soldiers] about it because if we did they would cause us a lot of problems. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 29 Villagers complain of the many checkpoints and the amount of money they are arbitrarily required to pay while traveling to and from their fields or plantations. Villagers and mine workers must go through up to eight different checkpoints before arriving at their destination. There are checkpoints at Paya Gyi, Kan Bee Aye, Ka Htee Wa, Kyauk Naga, T Nay Pa, Ma Inn Ga, Meh Zone and Win Koke. 30 The checkpoints around the mining sites have effectively enclosed the people, forcing the mine workers and their families to pay fees to travel in and out. Mine workers are also required to pay fees for anything they bring into the mining sites, such as sacks of rice or cooking oil. As the companies develop the mining areas they use the soldiers more and more to restrict the people from entering the mining sites. Most of the companies employ workers from Nyaunglebin, Pegu, and Mandauk. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 31 The military took the land and sold some of it to the mining businesses. Sometimes they did joint ventures with the mining companies. In these cases they used a lot of security in the area and closed the area off. They created little self contained towns in these areas. They collected taxes from the families of the mine workers living inside the closed off area. They also taxed the mine workers when they brought goods like rice sacks and oil back into the closed off area. Burman migrant mine worker in Shwegyin township. 32 Fees are also required on any goods that are brought through the other checkpoints as well. Villagers taking shaut down to Shwegyin to sell in the market must pay 500 Kyat per load to each checkpoint on the way. There are also fees for logs, dogfruit, cane, rice whisky, charcoal, bamboo, firewood, and sacks of rice. 33 Boats must pay 500 Kyat at each checkpoint along the river. 34 The money collected at each checkpoint goes to the camp responsible for the checkpoint. The money collected is used for the camp and the battalion headquarters of the unit stationed in the camp at the time. These restrictions violate a number of widely recognized international norms prohibiting forced relocation and guaranteeing the right to livelihood. The International Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), for instance, affirms the right... to an adequate standard of living... including adequate food, clothing, housing, and to the continuous improvement of living conditions. 35 Forced relocation and interference with the resettlement process seriously impairs the enjoyment of these human rights.

30 Forced Labor 29 When we go to do loh ah pay [forced labor] we have to buy bamboo, thatch shingles, and posts and take them by bullock cart to go fi x the camp. If the Army doesn t demand loh ah pay, the soldiers would be unhappy because they would have to do the work themselves and they are lazy. Usually they order us to cut bamboo poles, fi x the roads, build fences, or clear the brush along the roads. We have to spend time on them because if they have to cut the bamboo poles and spend time clearing the brush themselves, they won t have time to go to the mountains and fi ght against the rebels. Burman migrant mine worker in Shwegyin township. 36 The Burmese Army and the Township PDC routinely order the civilians in Shwegyin township to perform forced labor, in spite of frequent demands by the International Labor Organization (ILO) to put a halt to the activity. Forced labor is widely regarded as a form of slavery, and is illegal under international legal instruments, including the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 8 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights, and Convention No. 29 of the International Labor Organization. 37 The prohibition of slavery is considered a peremptory norm in international law, meaning it supersedes even customary international law and cannot be violated by any state or treaty. The practice of forced labor also contravenes the SPDC s own laws, specifically Order 1/99, which bans the practice. Order 1/99 was issued in May 1999 and the Supplementary Order to Order 1/99 was issued in October both require military and civilian officials to refrain from using civilians as unpaid laborers, and they also call for punishment of anyone who continues to do so. Although the use of villagers for certain types of work such as portering has declined, the use of forced labor for maintenance and construction of roads, clearing of brush along the roads, and work at Army camps continues unabated. All of the camps in the Shwegyin area use forced laborers from surrounding villages in order to maintain the camps and their infrastructure. Some villages are forced to answer demands from two or more camps. The thirty-two villages in the three village tracts of Ma Inn Ga, Si Zone Gone, and Ko Daung Seik are responsible for responding to the demands of two camps. 38 Despite the impossible expectations, villagers are unable to lodge effective complaints to the Army or the township officials about the demands for their labor. Villagers brave enough to cite the two SPDC orders that ban forced labor Order 1/99 and Supplementary Order to Order 1/99 are commonly told that those orders only apply to central Burma and not to frontline areas like Shwegyin township. They also order us to do construction work and maintenance work at their camps. Whatever they order us to do, whatever they want, we have to do it for them. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 39

31 30 In my village there is loh ah pay every month. One camp is in my village and when they need loh ah pay they order the village head to provide workers for them. Every year after the rainy season they order all the village tracts to come and fi x their camp. Burman migrant mine worker in Shwegyin township. 40 The laborers are usually demanded from the village headman who sends the required number of villagers on a rotating schedule. Villagers in the area say that they have to go three to five times every month. At the camps, the villagers are forced to cut bamboo, build fences around the camp, fix roofs, clear the brush from around the camp, and do anything else that is ordered by the soldiers. Villagers say that most of the work is done immediately before and after the rainy season. All of the work must be completed by deadlines specified by the Army camp, regardless of any problems. 41 They order people to cut bamboo, build fences, fi x roofs and whatever else they want. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 42 We also have to do loh ah pay. They order us to work like this three or four times a month. Each tract has to go and work for them. We especially have to work before and after the rainy season. They order us to fi x things at the Army camp and do daily maintenance on things. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 43 For the two camps at Bow Lo and Ma Inn Ga they usually ordered us to repair the camp buildings, dig trenches, and collect visitor fees. Loh ah pay happened about four or fi ve times a month. We usually had to do loh ah pay before and after the rainy season. We have to take our own bamboo, nails, shingles, posts, logs, and food. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 44 Last March [2005] 60 of our villagers went to rebuild Baw Lo camp. There were also other villages that had to come and fi x the camp. When we went there we had to take our own tools, knives, thatch, bamboo, and posts for fi xing the camp. Each family had to take responsibility for a four to fi ve foot section of the fence. Some people work inside the camp buildings, some clear the camp area outside and some replace the old posts with new posts. We bring our own food to eat for lunch. Then we work at building again and then we go back to our own village. Burman migrant mine worker in Shwegyin township. 45 Villagers are also ordered to maintain the roads in the area and to clear the brush from alongside the roads. Road maintenance means filling in holes in the road with stones and shoring up road embankments that collapsed in the rainy season. Brush is cut from alongside both sides of the road to provide the Army with clear fields of fire in case of ambush along the roads and to make it difficult for the resistance to sneak out onto the roads and lay landmines. 46 The roads in the area are predominately used by the Army to move troops and supplies.

32 Villagers must bring their own tools and food when they go for forced labor. When the Army decides infrastructure such as barracks and fences must be built, the villagers must bring along their own building materials such as bamboo, thatch shingles, nails, wood posts, and logs. 47 At present, very little bamboo is left in the area so villagers must buy each pole they bring for 200 Kyat. 48 Both Karen villagers and Burman mine workers are ordered by the Army to work. Children as young as 16 years old are sometimes required to work when their parents are busy in the fields or at the mine sites. If the Army or the Township PDC Chairman does not approve of the quality of work completed, or if the work was not completed within the specified time frame, villagers are often punished or forced to do the work again They want the work done by a certain time, even if there are complications with the assigned jobs that make them diffi cult. Every month we have to work for them and give them a fee at the right time. If we do this, then we don t have any problems. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 50 Last March the Shwegyin township PDC chairman ordered all the villages in the area to clear the brush along the road to over 20 feet from the road. Then they ordered us to fi x the roads and the bridges. Each village was in charge of an area and they had to fi nish the area by the same day. Each village had to take responsibility for their area. Our village had 80 villagers who had to work on the road and we divided the work. Women had to cut down the brush and men had to fi x the bridge and the road. There were also some children around 16 years old who were working because their parents had gone to the mining area. We allowed them to only carry branches from the bushes and other small things. Whenever the township chairman orders us to do something and we don t do it perfectly we have to do it again. Burman migrant mine worker in Shwegyin township. 51 When they are working forced labor, villagers are unable to work their fields and plantations or to work as day laborers in town, which has a significant impact on daily survival, often preventing them from earning enough money to buy rice and other daily needs. Villagers who do not want to report for forced labor can try to find another villager to go in their place, but otherwise they are required to pay 1,000 Kyat per day to the Army camp. 52 In addition to violating international norms and laws expressly forbidding the use of forced labor, these practices also interfere with victims right to livelihood as guaranteed by the ICESCR. 53 Some villagers go [to forced labor] themselves and others pay money to the soldiers so they don t have to go. It costs 1,000 Kyat to pay instead of going. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 54 When they demand loh ah pay people don t want to go work, so they try to pay money. So the soldiers demand loh ah pay knowing that they will get money from the villagers. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 55

33 32 Fees The Army not only sees the villagers as a ready source of labor but also as a convenient source of income. While some of this money is used for the upkeep of the camps and for the soldiers, most of it goes into the pockets of the officers. When treated as income, a portion of the money is kept by the officers at the local level and the rest trickles its way up the chain of command. A posting at the frontline is often seen not as a way of defeating insurgents, but as a way to make money. We have to bring food to give them whenever we want to go to talk with them. Every month the villagers have to give 1,000 Kyat to build a good relationship with the soldiers. We don t care what we have to spend every month; we only care about not causing trouble. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 56 They don t have a systematic way of taxing. Whatever they feel like asking for they ask for. When they ask for a fee or a pass you have to be very polite to them and if you answer them wrongly you might be in trouble. Burman migrant mine worker in Shwegyin township. 57 Villagers who own and work fields and plantations must pay a field tax to the Army or the Township PDC. Taxes differ depending on what the villager is growing in his field or plantation. For example, villagers working shaut plantations reportedly have to pay 2,000 Kyat each month to each camp as a field tax. 58 Other fees are blatantly unofficial and go directly into the Army s pockets. For example, villagers must pay 2,000 Kyat each month to the local Army camp. Sometimes, the villagers must pay this to more than one camp each month, as is the case with Su Mu Hta village. There are also fees levied on shops, karaoke houses, video cinemas, tea shops, and for having visitors stay overnight. Some of this money is used for the upkeep of the camp or for buying rations for the soldiers, but most of it is simply treated as income by local officers and higher officers at the battalion level. We have to give monthly fees to each camp of 2,000 Kyat. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 59 These three village tracts have to look after two Army camps. One Army camp is by the Shwegyin River and the other one is to the west of the Shwegyin River. Every month we have to give 2,000 Kyat to each camp. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 60 After paying the fees and buying food and other necessities, villagers have considerably less money for daily survival, and no money to save. The rising costs of food and other goods are steadily making the situation more difficult. Villagers now take daily wage jobs simply to make enough money to pay the Army, and these jobs prevent them from working on their fields and plantations or at daily wage labor that goes directly to buying rice and other daily needs for their families. One villager told EarthRights International that after paying all the fees to the Army, he had lost about one third of the income he received each month from

34 the sale of the shaut from his plantation. 61 Another villager reported that he paid 10,000 Kyat each month to the Army, or 50% of his monthly income I have 5 acres of shaut plantation. Most of my income comes from growing the shaut, but I have to give one third of my income to the military. Food and other things are very expensive also. We cannot save any money. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 63 When the three battalions arrived we had to pay a monthly fi eld tax, money for loh ah pay, checkpoint fees and visitor fees. Every month the villagers have to give 2,000 Kyat for a fi eld tax. There are two camps around our village area so we have to pay each camp 2,000 Kyat per month. We lose income every month by giving fi eld taxes and fees. If we don t want to go for loh ah pay we have to pay 1,000 Kyat per day. Every month I have to pay over 10,000 Kyat. That amount of money is fi fty percent of my income. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 64 Land Confiscation For years the Army has confiscated land from the villagers of Shwegyin township, and that land has been used to construct camps or it has been converted to commercial agricultural projects. Compensation is very rarely paid to villagers for the land taken by the Army, and land is taken arbitrarily and at will. Villagers are often told that confiscation is permissible in Burma because no one owns the land. Villagers commonly find themselves working on the Army s commercial agricultural projects, which exist on land they formerly owned. That is, after their land is confiscated, villagers are often forced to work on their own land, with no compensation for their work or for the land that was previously confiscated at their expense. Most villagers are too afraid of the soldiers and the Army to complain, and those villagers brave enough to lodge a complaint to the Army or the Township PDC have received no help or compensation. These instances of land confiscation interfere with or directly violate a number of internationally recognized rights, including the ICESCR s right to livelihood, and the International Covenant on Human Rights, which provides, inter alia, that local communities and individuals shall have full and complete sovereignty over all their natural wealth and resources. 65 We don t have land licenses and the township chairman said the land was not legal land and no one owns it so we could use it. So when the Army came they set up their battalion camps wherever they wanted and took the land. When the battalions came to Shwegyin area they took the land and they built camps and started farming and doing projects [to make money]. There are a lot of rubber and mangosteen plantation projects and military building projects around the Shwegyin area. We haven t had any conversations with them because we are afraid they would punish us. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 66

35 34 All around the area there are a lot of security checkpoints and areas closed off to the public. The military government in the Shwegyin area took all the free land in the area and the land that people owned. They started plantation projects for their battalions. Burman migrant mine worker in Shwegyin township. 67 The SPDC has used the confiscated land for large-scale commercial agricultural projects to grow mangosteen, coffee, and rubber. Most of these plantations are controlled by the local battalions, although there are some wealthy business partners involved in the operations as well. 68 During a visit to Shwegyin township on 12 March 2005, Maj. Gen. Ko Ko gave a speech to the assembled township officials about the need to increase the acreage under rubber plantation in Pegu Division from 50,000 to 100,000 acres in three years starting from the fiscal year. He said that 30,000 of those acres were planned for Shwegyin township. 69 A rubber processing plant is also slated to be built in Shwegyin. Water from the Kyauk Naga Dam reservoir is the most likely source to irrigate the plantations. The Olympic Company Ltd., a firm recently contracted by the SPDC to complete the Kyauk Naga Dam, currently leases land from the SPDC elsewhere in the country to grow rubber and could be a likely candidate to do so here. 70 Some of the confiscated land has been converted into fish ponds by the Army, used to raise fish for sale to local villagers. Villagers who want to fish in these ponds themselves must pay a fee to the Army. 71 Generally, villagers are not only deprived of their land and charged fees to work their land, but they quite expectedly never see any direct or indirect profits from the projects on their land. The Army and the business leaders have also taken the land from the villagers to use for large agricultural projects where they plant mangosteen, coffee and rubber trees. The fi elds have also been converted into fi shponds by the battalions. The villagers had to relocate and were forced to become day laborers for other fi eld owners. The villagers went to complain to the township chairman about this, but the township chairman didn t do anything for them. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 72

36 V. Gold Mining 35 The gold mining has been continuing for a long time and has become more advanced and using higher technology. They have permits from the government and the support of the Army. Wherever a businessman wants to do mining, landowners have to let them do whatever they want. Karen farmer in Shwegyin township. 73 The Mining Concessions In Shwegyin township, individual businessmen and mining companies from central Burma began prospecting for gold in Both small and large companies arrived at that time and surveyed the land for mining sites. Some of these mining companies are owned by the same Chinese and Shan businessmen involved in gem mining in Mogok, Mandalay Division. Initially, gold mining concessions were limited to areas near Mae Zaung, Ywa Myo, and Kyauk Naga Army camps along the Shwegyin River, even though gold deposits were known to be present in at least seven other nearby rivers: Mawtama, Oo Poke, Tin Pan, Kyauk M Ku, Meh Si, Meh La Pu and Bawgata. 74 The operations have since expanded, and there are now numerous gold mining operations of varying degrees of recovery in the areas of Boh Loh, Ywa Myo, Pway La Her and Ka Nee along the Shwegyin River. 75 According to one recent report from the field, there are currently between twenty and thirty hydraulic machines operating on the Shwegyin River north of the town. Each of these mining sites is estimated to separately recover 1.5 kilograms of gold per month. 76 There are also several larger mining operations along the Mawtama River with many smaller operations farther upstream, to the east and on its tributaries; the Kyauk M Ku, Oo Poke and Pago Rivers. Locally, gold from the Mawtama River area is considered to be better quality than the gold from the Shwegyin River area. 77 Both small scale and artisanal mining occurs in this area, as opposed to large scale mining, which often requires international financing and is characterized by extremely high recovery rates and technologically advanced industrial equipment. Large scale mines have yet to enter Shwegyin township. Small scale mines, on the other hand, vary in size, are labor intensive, and in this case use mechanized equipment and work under concessions awarded by the SPDC. Small scale mining operations in Shwegyin can have as many as 1,500 employees per mine site. Artisanal mining is characterized by rudimentary, traditional

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